This page has been edited 1 times. The last modification was made by - judithcbliss on Nov 8, 2014 5:44 pm
CCRMC OBGYN Prenatal Guideline
Consultation available 24 hours per day from OB on-call at 925-370-5608 or via page/amion, via inbasket to OB dept member or by calling Perinatologist at 510-444-0790 during the day and 510-204-1572 after hours.
Consultation appointments or transfer of care to more experienced prenatal clinician available at major clinics sites—see consultation guidelines for more information.
Isoimmunization
Prenatal patients are universally screened for isoimmunization in the prenatal lab panel. If an antibody is identified on the antibody screen, the first task is to identify whether the antibody is at risk of causing hemolysis in the fetus. See table below. The irregular antibody is frequently the result of a prior pregnancy or transfusion. Both major and minor antibodies can cause harm.
The antibody titer must be of sufficient levels to potentially cause harm. A greater than 1:8 to 1:16 titer is generally the level of concern but this can vary with a given antibody and, again, consultation is suggested. (Usually 1:16 for D, 1:8 for other antibodies)
Serial titers about monthly need to be followed if the initial result is not in a concerning range.
Irregular antibodies are of no concern if paternity is certain and FOB is negative for the corresponding antigen. Screen FOB for the corresponding antigen.
Patients with an irregular antibody of sufficient titer to cause hemolysis are then followed to identify if hemolysis is causing fetal anemia. Fetal middle cerebral artery (MCA) doppler sonography by perinatology at weekly intervals beginning at 20 wk EGA is the surrogate marker of choice in this situation. Schedule at EBPMA or Diablo Valley Perinatology and discuss plan with corresponding Perinatologist. Perinatology should be following the patient closely with you.
Antepartum testing for fetal well-being with modified BPP (NST, AFI) is also recommended usually from 32 wks EGA.
Intrauterine fetal transfusion at a referral center, usually UCSF, is indicated for severe anemia remote from term (<32wk EGA)
Early induction is indicated if MCA dopplers reveal significant hemolysis or if antepartum testing is nonreassuring. (>32wk EGA)
Generally patients at risk are induced at term even if testing is reassuring.
This page has been edited 1 times. The last modification was made by -
CCRMC OBGYN Prenatal Guideline
Consultation available 24 hours per day from OB on-call at 925-370-5608 or via page/amion, via inbasket to OB dept member or by calling Perinatologist at 510-444-0790 during the day and 510-204-1572 after hours.
Consultation appointments or transfer of care to more experienced prenatal clinician available at major clinics sites—see consultation guidelines for more information.
Isoimmunization
Prenatal patients are universally screened for isoimmunization in the prenatal lab panel. If an antibody is identified on the antibody screen, the first task is to identify whether the antibody is at risk of causing hemolysis in the fetus. See table below. The irregular antibody is frequently the result of a prior pregnancy or transfusion. Both major and minor antibodies can cause harm.
The antibody titer must be of sufficient levels to potentially cause harm. A greater than 1:8 to 1:16 titer is generally the level of concern but this can vary with a given antibody and, again, consultation is suggested. (Usually 1:16 for D, 1:8 for other antibodies)
Serial titers about monthly need to be followed if the initial result is not in a concerning range.
Irregular antibodies are of no concern if paternity is certain and FOB is negative for the corresponding antigen. Screen FOB for the corresponding antigen.
Patients with an irregular antibody of sufficient titer to cause hemolysis are then followed to identify if hemolysis is causing fetal anemia. Fetal middle cerebral artery (MCA) doppler sonography by perinatology at weekly intervals beginning at 20 wk EGA is the surrogate marker of choice in this situation. Schedule at EBPMA or Diablo Valley Perinatology and discuss plan with corresponding Perinatologist. Perinatology should be following the patient closely with you.
Antepartum testing for fetal well-being with modified BPP (NST, AFI) is also recommended usually from 32 wks EGA.
Intrauterine fetal transfusion at a referral center, usually UCSF, is indicated for severe anemia remote from term (<32wk EGA)
Early induction is indicated if MCA dopplers reveal significant hemolysis or if antepartum testing is nonreassuring. (>32wk EGA)
Generally patients at risk are induced at term even if testing is reassuring.